Amazon's Best Computer Books of 2004
theodp writes "Amazon.com's Editors have announced their selections for the Best Books of 2004 in the Computers and Internet category. Their favorite book of the year? Excel Hacks, which edged out Head First Servlets & JSP (#3), a Grand Theft Auto Strategy Guide (#5) and The Data Warehouse ETL Toolkit (#8). Can Slashdot readers offer some more inspired choices?"
Valves - why they are better than transistors.
Transistors - why they are better than valves.
The Transputer - computing the future in paralell.
Pong - strategy guide.
And the number one computing book of 1979.
Miss DEC - the pagent.
Beep beep.
Alternative to Amazon I have some computer related eigenpolls.
Agile Software Development Books
Best Practices for Software Development
Favorit websites
Spam Fighting Software
other books related eigenpoll are:
Alternative Science Books
Real Estate Investment books
Books on Accelerated Learning Techniques
Books for Automatic Trading Systems
I flipped through a bit and couldn't find what criteria they used to decide which were the best books. Out of the top 10 only 2 have any customer reviews. Is this a bestseller list, or just which publisher(s) paid the most to be on it?
They didn't mention The story about ping Clearly the best introduction to this network test tool.
Just look at the reviews, especially the one from John E. Fracisco.
If you're including "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas Official Strategy Guide" as a computing book, "101 Tips for Winning At Monopoly" in the list for Business/Management.
Games are cool, but they're not computing.
Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
Linux Server Hacks, Knoppix Hacks, and Network Security Hacks.
Meh.
Different mindset. We see "Computers and Internet" and think "programming", others see "Computers and Internet" and see "games, browsing, and chatting". "Computers and Internet" is now a very broad category.
EricI don't buy no book that doesn't have "for dummies" in the title.
So I wanna preorder
- Excel Hacks: 100 Industrial-Strength Tips and Tools for dummies
- The World's 20 Greatest Unsolved Problems for dummies
But really interesting sounds No. 4:I don't need a signature.
Best career book you can buy
Monstar L
"Write Great Code: Understanding the Machine"
Unbelievably interesting book. the premise being that the current generation of coders is among the first who were not *required* to learn Assembly Language, thus do not truly understand what is going on under the hood. Because of this, they are unable to create "great" code in high-level languages because they simply don't understand the inherent costs of various routines.
One of the secondary premises focuses on the fact that, while hardware power is advancing at Moore's Law pace, software is requiring more power at nearly the same rate, many times for no reason other than the developer(s) not knowing how to write truly efficient code.
"All that glitters is not gold"
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Wer mit Ungeheuern kämpft, mag zusehn, dass er nicht dabei zum Ungeheuer wird. --Nietzsche